scorecardIt might still be possible to recover your photos from a broken iPhone, even if Apple isn't able to help
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It might still be possible to recover your photos from a broken iPhone, even if Apple isn't able to help

What you should do to recover your photos from a broken iPhone

It might still be possible to recover your photos from a broken iPhone, even if Apple isn't able to help

What Jones did to retrieve photos from a broken iPhone

What Jones did to retrieve photos from a broken iPhone

In a separate video from CBC, Jones explained how she retrieved the photos from a Newfoundland couple's iPhone that had suffered water damage.

Jones simply made the broken iPhone functional again — or at least functional enough to retrieve the photos — by replacing water-damaged parts.

Once the iPhone could turn on, the iPhone functioned as it normally did before suffering water damage, and the photos could be extracted from the iPhone.

If Jones couldn't repair the iPhone itself to turn on and function normally, it would have been unlikely that the photos could have been retrieved. A quick search through Apple's support forum revealed that data on iPhones — like photos — are encrypted, and can't be extracted from an iPhone's storage without the iPhone being functional to decrypt the data.

You can see the full video of how Jones was able to retrieve the photos below:

How to avoid losing your photos in the first place

How to avoid losing your photos in the first place

Download and use Google Photos. It's that simple.

Google Photos is the easiest and cheapest way to backup all your photos and videos. It gives you an unlimited amount of cloud storage for photos and videos, which can automatically upload from iPhones to Google's Photos cloud.

Apple has a similar service to Google Photos called iCloud Photos, but it's part of your iCloud storage, of which you only get a mere 5GB of free storage compared to the unlimited storage on Google Photos. You could pay to get more iCloud storage, of course. Or get free unlimited storage on Google Photos. It's your call.

I should note that Google Photos' free storage compresses your photos and videos to take up less space in Google's cloud, which can affect the quality of your photos and videos. To save your photos in original quality, Google Photos will use your Google cloud storage. You get 15GB of free storage with Google's cloud storage, which can fill up pretty quickly if you take a lot of photos and videos. For more Google cloud storage, you'll need to buy plans with more storage from Google.

From personal experience, the difference in quality between Google Photo's free "high quality" storage and "original quality" storage is negligible.

Check out CBC's full video about retrieving photos from a broken iPhone:

Check out CBC

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